Parity

With my exam on Friday, I'm trying to get all these practice probs done since some of them will be on the exam.

If is the Parity Operator, determine the parity of the functions below:

Now, if is the Hamiltonian Operator with , find the parity of

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So for the first func, we know that sin(x) is an odd function, and hence that would be -sin(x) if I'm not mistaken since the parity would take sin(x) and make it sin(-x) and thus it'd have parity -1? We only dealt with cos/sin in our notes, so I'm not sure what an extra operator does and the role of exponential functions.

With my exam on Friday, I'm trying to get all these practice probs done since some of them will be on the exam.

If is the Parity Operator, determine the parity of the functions below:

Now, if is the Hamiltonian Operator with , find the parity of

------

So for the first func, we know that sin(x) is an odd function, and hence that would be -sin(x) if I'm not mistaken since the parity would take sin(x) and make it sin(-x) and thus it'd have parity -1? We only dealt with cos/sin in our notes, so I'm not sure what an extra operator does and the role of exponential functions.

Is this related to some Physics concepts?
I am guessing that we need to define a function called P that will map like this P(f(x)) = f(-x).

Hopefully Topsquark, our physics maestro, will help us out with the last one. I have no clue what you are talking about. What does do?

With my exam on Friday, I'm trying to get all these practice probs done since some of them will be on the exam.

If is the Parity Operator, determine the parity of the functions below:

Now, if is the Hamiltonian Operator with , find the parity of

------

So for the first func, we know that sin(x) is an odd function, and hence that would be -sin(x) if I'm not mistaken since the parity would take sin(x) and make it sin(-x) and thus it'd have parity -1? We only dealt with cos/sin in our notes, so I'm not sure what an extra operator does and the role of exponential functions.

Originally Posted by Isomorphism

Is this related to some Physics concepts?
I am guessing that we need to define a function called P that will map like this P(f(x)) = f(-x).

Hopefully Topsquark, our physics maestro, will help us out with the last one. I have no clue what you are talking about. What does do?